sohail-khan86 said:
I dont understand what's so complicated. .I have both and there is no problem what so ever..us green card is granted by us govt so canadian's have no right to question about it and same goes for canadian pr card.. us have no right questioning about that so no worries.. one of the persons just replied that u have to
surrender one of them in order to get other.. that is the biggest joke of this century. ..
Great, that YOU have no problems maintaining both, but that doesn't mean it won't be problematic for others. It'll be fine for the original poster since he/she was 1 year from US citizenship eligibility. He could land in Canada, then continue to live in the US until he got US citizenship. He can be out of Canada for 3 out of 5 years and still meet his Canadian residency obligations and that should have been plenty of time.
As for the other posters who aren't close to meeting citizenship obligations, maintaining both PR and Greencard
indefinitely is certainly problematic. Living in the US and traveling to Canada twice a year for 2.5 months...that strategy meets the obligations of both countries, but is only possible if you're independently wealthy (i.e., no need to work) or have a job that allows you to telecommute. At the average US job, your vacation time is going to be between 2 and 4 weeks, nothing close to the 5 months that you'd need.
You could live in Canada and just enter the US every 6 months or so, but US immigration frequently asks how long you were out. Telling US immigration that you've been out of the country for 6 months...and having to do that twice a year for several years (say, 5 years to get Canadian citizenship)...at some point, you might run into problems. Actually, I think it's pretty likely. As a former Greencard holder, I never got sent to secondary flying through JFK and LAX, even after 6 months abroad. However, I've been sent to secondary (US) at Pearson Airport
twice...I was visiting my husband frequently (but at no point as long as 6 months). So, if you get sent to secondary, it's likely the jig is up. And of course
US immigration officers have every right to ask about your Canadian residency status...in fact that's probably the first question they'll ask in secondary. "You're in Canada an awful lot...you're living there, aren't you." At that point you've blown your US residency status. Could it be done? Yes, but it's pretty risky and I certainly wouldn't characterize it as "no problem". Because really, you've failed to meet the US residency obligations when you established residency in Canada.
Personally, I think the best strategy is getting a re-entry permit or N-470 to preserve the Greencard and living in Canada until you get Canadian citizenship. Of course the big sticking point is eligibility.
A re-entry permit is good for 2 years. They aren't renewable, but you can apply for another one after the first expires. However, you need a good reason for why you need another one (the form asks for "purpose of your trip" and your total time outside the US in the past 5 years). "I'm living and working in Canada" is not a good reason.
An N-470 will preserve your Greencard, but only if you're going abroad to do very specific work:
- Work abroad for U.S. Government
- Work abroad doing Scientific Research for American institute of research
- Work abroad as employee for American company that is engaging in development of foreign trade and commerce
- Work abroad to protect property rights of American company that is engaging in development of foreign trade and commerce
- Work abroad for public international organization of which USA is member
- Work abroad in Religious position with qualifying religious or interdenominational mission organization
G.L.